Get More Sales Over The Phone

Get More Sales Over The Phone

Ask Andi: How do we get more sales over the phone? Our salespeople network without any certainty that they will meet someone who fits our target criteria. I’d like them to save energy by working the phones. They complain that cold calling is a waste of time. What can we do?

Thoughts of the Day: Grow your sales over the phone. Salespeople want to talk with other people – that’s how they’re wired. Do homework before making calls. Make each call personal. Don’t presume there’s a lead – find out. Focus on what goes right. Set goals and measure results. When cold calling, it’s a numbers game. Keep dialing and learn to break through.

Get more sales over the phone

Don’t eliminate networking. Do add up the time that goes into networking: out of bed at 6 am, in the car by 7 am to get to the event by 7:30; at the end of the day rush out of the office to get to an event, home well past 8 pm; canvass a room of strangers only to find the prospects skipped the event; sort through business cards the next day and still have to make cold calls.

Watch their eyes glaze over when you tell a salesperson to stop networking and make cold calls. They’ve heard it before. When pitching cold calling as a sales strategy focus on what salespeople care about: talk to more people faster, build a bigger Rolodex of sales opportunities, and make more money.

A sales persons’ job is to talk with people. Help them do that and save them time by doing their marketing for them. Research lists of likely prospects. Provide background information on targets. Send out letters and teasers. Warm up the target community so they respond to a call – that’s marketing. Give salespeople a list of people who are likely to buy and likely to talk – that will get any salesperson’s attention.

When calling make sure you have something useful to offer and be concise about how to convey that offer. Start the call with something that will hook the call recipient – whether it’s a direct connect or voicemail, be able to say, “I’ve done my homework, and we should be talking, I can help you.”

When it comes to sales, the phone is a powerful tool

Be respectful of peoples’ time. Find out if they have time to talk. If they don’t, make an appointment to call back – and ask them what you should do if you call back and can’t get through. Give callers permission to push back – but check out if it’s valid.

Don’t sound like a stranger. Know enough about the person/business you’re calling that you don’t fumble around with inane generalities. Be prepared to have a real, live dialog, not just ask a bunch of canned questions. Be truly interested in what the call recipient is saying. Use the phone for what it’s good for – qualifying the situation, asking for a meeting, or deciding to move on to the next prospect.

When it comes to cold calling, goals, and measures are helpful if there’s enough quantity. Making 5 calls/per day won’t get enough traction. Try 50-70 dials at a time. That might take an hour or two – no more than the time you would have spent at a networking event.

Practice cold calling regularly – at least a couple of times/week. It’s about building muscle. If you only go to the gym once every week or two, it’s going to hurt every time you go. If you show up multiple times weekly, it gets easier.

Warm-up by making enough calls to get into the flow. Focus on the calls that go well. Except for learning, don’t spend time worrying about calls that were off track. Even at networking events, you’ll meet rude people you’d rather not have contact with.

Looking for a good book?

How to Sell More, in Less Time, With No Rejection: Using Common Sense Telephone Techniques, by Art Sobczak.